Iraq’s Christians ‘close to extinction’

The Archbishop of Irbil in Iraqi Kurdistan, has accused Britain’s leaders of failing to do enough in defence of the vanishing Christian community in Iraq. This is despite Britain recently issued a report on the persecution of Christians. The Irish Government never highlights the issue preferring to refer to persecution of religion generally.

In an address in London, the Rt Rev Bashar Warda said Iraq’s Christians now faced extinction after 1,400 years of persecution.

Since the US-led invasion toppled the regime of Saddam Hussein in 2003, he said, the Christian community had dwindled by 83%, from around 1.5 million to just 250,000.

He referred to the current, pressing threat from Islamic State (IS) jihadists as a “final, existential struggle”, following the group’s initial assault in 2014 that displaced more than 125,000 Christians from their historic homelands.

The archbishop went on to accuse Britain’s Christian leaders of “political correctness” over the issue. He called the failure to condemn extremism “a cancer”, saying they were not speaking out loudly enough for fear of being accused of Islamophobia.

“Will you continue to condone this never-ending, organised persecution against us?” he said. “When the next wave of violence begins to hit us, will anyone on your campuses hold demonstrations and carry signs that say ‘We are all Christians’?”

The Iona Institute
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